Friday, March 18, 2016
Easter Devotion (Day 32) - Unity of the Spirit
May the God who gives endurance and encouragement give you the same attitude of mind toward each other that Christ Jesus had, so that with one mind and one voice you may glorify the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.
Romans 15:5-6
This passage comes toward the conclusion of the Letter to the Romans. One of Paul's great concerns in this letter was disagreements between the Jews and the Gentiles of the fledgling churches of Rome. This prayer is part of a longer passage appealing for understanding and unity, regardless of backgrounds.
Often these verses are read as a call to ecumenicalism, or churches with different backgrounds worshiping together. While Paul would undoubtedly have encouraged this, it is only the surface of what he was requesting in this prayer. He is actually asking that believers learn to think about one another the way that Jesus thinks about them, a way entirely based in love. Every person on earth is loved by Jesus. He came to earth, died, and rose again for each individual person. If we look at everyone we meet as someone whom Jesus felt was worth dying for, then how can we treat them as anything but a brother or sister? Think how Jesus reached out to those on the edge of society, eating and drinking with sinners, healing lepers, and blessing the poor. There is no room for anything but a self-sacrificing, encouraging, and uplifting attitude among anyone claiming to have the thoughts of Jesus.
Prayer: Lord Jesus, may I see others through Your eyes and learn to love them as You do. Help me to remember Your way of love, a way that brought You to the cross for the sins of every human being. Help me to reach out to every brother and sister in Christ, no matter what their background. In Your Name I pray, Amen.
*This devotion taken from The Sanctuary for Lent 2016 by Sue Mink
Romans 15:5-6
This passage comes toward the conclusion of the Letter to the Romans. One of Paul's great concerns in this letter was disagreements between the Jews and the Gentiles of the fledgling churches of Rome. This prayer is part of a longer passage appealing for understanding and unity, regardless of backgrounds.
Often these verses are read as a call to ecumenicalism, or churches with different backgrounds worshiping together. While Paul would undoubtedly have encouraged this, it is only the surface of what he was requesting in this prayer. He is actually asking that believers learn to think about one another the way that Jesus thinks about them, a way entirely based in love. Every person on earth is loved by Jesus. He came to earth, died, and rose again for each individual person. If we look at everyone we meet as someone whom Jesus felt was worth dying for, then how can we treat them as anything but a brother or sister? Think how Jesus reached out to those on the edge of society, eating and drinking with sinners, healing lepers, and blessing the poor. There is no room for anything but a self-sacrificing, encouraging, and uplifting attitude among anyone claiming to have the thoughts of Jesus.
Prayer: Lord Jesus, may I see others through Your eyes and learn to love them as You do. Help me to remember Your way of love, a way that brought You to the cross for the sins of every human being. Help me to reach out to every brother and sister in Christ, no matter what their background. In Your Name I pray, Amen.
*This devotion taken from The Sanctuary for Lent 2016 by Sue Mink
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